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France in eighteen hundred and two cover

France in eighteen hundred and two

Chapter 48: APPENDIX
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About This Book

A collection of contemporary letters presents a British visitor's account of France in 1802, combining travel narrative, descriptive scenes, and political commentary. The writer records journeys between ports and provincial towns, encounters with customs officials and soldiers, and everyday hardships caused by war and revolution. Observations address administrative control under the Consulate, the mood and motivations of conscripts, municipal practices, and the persistence of social disorder alongside attempts at order. Interspersed reflections recall revolutionary events and legal proceedings while conveying local color, practical travel details, and reflections on the nation’s unsettled condition.

APPENDIX

[BIOGRAPHICAL NOTES]

TO

LETTERS FROM FRANCE

IN 1802

THESE BIOGRAPHIES COMPRISE SHORT NOTICES OF CERTAIN PERSONS MENTIONED BY MR. REDHEAD YORKE IN HIS LETTERS FROM FRANCE.

I HAVE NOT THOUGHT IT NECESSARY TO INCLUDE THEREIN BIOGRAPHIES OF ANY MEMBER OF THE BONAPARTE FAMILY NOR OF SUCH WELL-KNOWN ENGLISHMEN AS WILLIAM PITT AND CHARLES FOX, BUT MERELY ENDEAVOURED TO GIVE A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF CERTAIN LEADING CHARACTERS IN THE FIRST FRENCH REVOLUTION WHOM A LATER GENERATION HAS FORGOTTEN, AND ALSO DESCRIBED CERTAIN OTHER HISTORICAL PERSONAGES.

V. A. C. SYKES.